For I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground: I will pour my spirit upon thy seed, and my blessing upon thine offspring.
Isaiah 44:3
In my last installment of my Kenyan travel series
here, I mentioned that we were on our way to a community borehole. I don't actually know the name of the village where the borehole is located but I had been there years before (and it is several hours by dirt road to the west of Marigat). In my first visit about 5 years ago, the missionary at the mission station took me on a tour of this arid area and told me of his hopes and dreams for building a borehole and a new church as well. I didn't have the funds myself or the contacts for helping but I said I would commit this matter to prayer.
It took another year or more but through God's grace he led me to a Christian humanitarian group that promised to visit Kenya and see what they could do to help. Though it took them another year or so they did make good on their promise to visit Kenya. Once they saw this arid place for themselves, they committed to raising funds for the borehole. Now a borehole has been built but the community still has no water. The area has been terribly plagued by drought and some of the hostilities that have arisen have resulted in huge tensions in the surrounding area and even led to loss of life.
What is needed now are significantly more funds and a pump by which the water can be transported over large distances to the people who need it. I'm told that the humanitarian group hopes to make another visit late this summer or early Fall. I pray that they will make it and that they will indeed be able to raise the funds required. This would surely be a huge blessing to the people. In my most recent trip to Kenya, I just had to see the borehole for myself and recollect just how much has gone into the state of things as they are currently. There have been other changes since I first visited, including a new missionary to this village. Thank God for people who are willing to go and minister in areas like this.
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This road goes through a more densely populated part of the village where we were visiting for the day. |
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It led us to this road which I love as it has an umbrella of trees making it look like a pretty country road. |
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Despite the significant drought that has affected this area, the children are like children anywhere... |
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...laughing and playing and alternately confident and bashful with visitors. |
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Here I pose with some of the leaders in the community as well as the children in the neighbouring area. We are posing with the honoured guest, the reason for our trip, the borehole. The clouds look like they are about to burst open with raindrops and drench the parched ground. But it wasn't to be. Before long, the sky was clear once again and the heat remained. |
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Here is the borehole. It represents lots of prayer, struggle, ups and downs, anguish and dashed hopes. It also represents the hope that is still there for clear and pure water for this community of people. |
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It was very hot and dry in the area. These mud huts are the traditional abode of the people and I was invited into one. The adults were not home but some local men let me in. |
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I could not believe how absolutely cool it was inside and what a welcome relief! The newspapers that hang from the rafters are cut into pretty shapes to decorate the inside. |
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The laundry flutters in the small breeze. |
It was a blessing to visit this village again and now I continue to pray for their water needs. Would you join me in praying that this well could indeed be completed so that the children, the elders and the people in general can have some clean water to drink?
God bless you.
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